The History of Christianity: From the Disciples to the Dawn of the Reformation

(Rick Simeone) #1

Lecture 23: The Rise of Islam and the Threat of Iconoclasm


monophysitism, the teaching that emphasized the divine in Christ to
the virtual elimination of the human.

•    The emperor Heraclius (610–641) met with monophysite leaders in
an effort to construct a compromise understanding of Christ.
o They declared that although there were two natures in Christ
(as Chalcedon had defined), there was but a “single energy”
(mia energeia). This proposal was popular with many,
including Cyrus of Alexandria, but was rejected by Sophronius
of Jerusalem.

o Pope Honorius was consulted in 634; he responded with the
idea of “one will” (monon thelema), from which the term
monotheletism derives.

o The patriarch of Constantinople, Sergius, then composed
a work called the Ecthesis, advancing the monotheletism
understanding of Christ: Only the divine volition was active
in Christ. The implication is that any real human obedience of
Jesus directed toward God is eliminated.

o A dogmatic edict in support of this understanding was issued
by the emperor Heraclius in 638 and was confirmed by two
synods in Constantinople in 638 and 639.

•    The declaration was staunchly opposed by three successive popes,
who held to the Chalcedonian understanding of Christ: two natures
in one person, with the implication that Christ as human had a real
human will. But the major opponent to the monothelite variation
of monophysitism was the theologian Maximus the Confessor
(580–662).
o An imperial secretary under Heraclius, Maximus abandoned
the court and became a monk in 614. In the Persian invasion of
626, he fled to Africa, ending in Carthage.
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